There once was a woman who wanted so very much to have a tiny
little child, but she did not know where to find one. So she went
to an old witch, and she said:

"I have set my heart upon having a tiny little child. Please
could you tell me where I can find one?"

"Why, that's easily done," said the witch.
"Here's a grain of barley for you, but it isn't at
all the sort of barley that farmers grow in their fields or that
the chickens get to eat. Put it in a flower pot and you'll
see what you shall see."

"Oh thank you!" the woman said. She gave the witch twelve
pennies, and planted the barley seed as soon as she got home. It
quickly grew into a fine large flower, which looked very much
like a tulip. But the petals were folded tight, as though it were
still a bud.

"This is such a pretty flower," said the woman. She kissed
its lovely red and yellow petals, and just as she kissed it the
flower gave a loud pop! and flew open. It was a tulip,
right enough, but on the green cushion in the middle of it sat a
tiny girl. She was dainty and fair to see, but she was no taller
than your thumb. So she was called Thumbelina.

A nicely polished walnut shell served as her cradle. Her
mattress was made of the blue petals of violets, and a rose petal
was pulled up to cover her. That was how she slept at night. In
the daytime she played on a table where the woman put a plate
surrounded with a wreath of flowers. Their stems lay in the
water, on which there floated a large tulip petal. Thumbelina
used the petal as a boat, and with a pair of white horsehairs for
oars she could row clear across the plate-a charming sight. She
could sing, too. Her voice was the softest and sweetest that
anyone ever has heard.

One night as she lay in her cradle, a horrible toad hopped
in through the window-one of the panes was broken. This big,
ugly, slimy toad jumped right down on the table where Thumbelina
was asleep under the red rose petal.

"Here's a perfect wife for my son!" the toad
exclaimed. She seized upon the walnut shell in which Thumbelina
lay asleep, and hopped off with it, out the window and into the
garden. A big broad stream ran through it, with a muddy marsh
along its banks, and here the toad lived with her son. Ugh! he
was just like his mother, slimy and horrible. "Co-ax, co-ax,
brek-ek-eke-kex," was all that he could say when he saw the
graceful little girl in the walnut shell.

"Don't speak so loud, or you will wake her up," the
old toad told him. "She might get away from us yet, for she is as
light as a puff of swan's-down. We must put her on one of
the broad water lily leaves out in the stream. She is so small
and light that it will be just like an island to her, and she
can't run away from us while we are making our best room
under the mud ready for you two to live in."

Many water lilies with broad green leaves grew in the
stream, and it looked as if they were floating on the surface.
The leaf which lay furthest from the bank was the largest of them
all, and it was to this leaf that the old toad swam with the
walnut shell which held Thumbelina.

The poor little thing woke up early next morning, and when
she saw where she was she began to cry bitterly. There was water
all around the big green leaf and there was no way at all for her
to reach the shore. The old toad sat in the mud, decorating a
room with green rushes and yellow water lilies, to have it
looking its best for her new daughter-in-law. Then she and her
ugly son swam out to the leaf on which Thumbelina was standing.
They came for her pretty little bed, which they wanted to carry
to the bridal chamber before they took her there.

The old toad curtsied deep in the water before her, and
said:

"Meet my son. He is to be your husband, and you will share a
delightful home in the mud."

"Co-ax, co-ax, brek-ek-eke-kex," was all that her son could
say.

Then they took the pretty little bed and swam away with it.
Left all alone on the green leaf, Thumbelina sat down and cried.
She did not want to live in the slimy toad's house, and she
didn't want to have the toad's horrible son for her
husband. The little fishes who swam in the water beneath her had
seen the toad and heard what she had said. So up popped their
heads to have a look at the little girl. No sooner had they seen
her than they felt very sorry that anyone so pretty should have
to go down to live with that hideous toad. No, that should never
be! They gathered around the green stem which held the leaf where
she was, and gnawed it in two with their teeth. Away went the
leaf down the stream, and away went Thumbelina, far away where
the toad could not catch her.

Thumbelina sailed past many a place, and when the little
birds in the bushes saw her they sang, "What a darling little
girl." The leaf drifted further and further away with her, and so
it was that Thumbelina became a traveler.

A lovely white butterfly kept fluttering around her, and at
last alighted on the leaf, because he admired Thumbelina. She was
a happy little girl again, now that the toad could not catch her.
It was all very lovely as she floated along, and where the sun
struck the water it looked like shining gold. Thumbelina undid
her sash, tied one end of it to the butterfly, and made the other
end fast to the leaf. It went much faster now, and Thumbelina
went much faster too, for of course she was standing on it.

Just then, a big May-bug flew by and caught sight of her.
Immediately he fastened his claws around her slender waist and
flew with her up into a tree. Away went the green leaf down the
stream, and away went the butterfly with it, for he was tied to
the leaf and could not get loose.

My goodness! How frightened little Thumbelina was when the
May-bug carried her up in the tree. But she was even more sorry
for the nice white butterfly she had fastened to the leaf,
because if he couldn't free himself he would have to starve
to death. But the May-bug wasn't one to care about that. He
sat her down on the largest green leaf of the tree, fed her honey
from the flowers, and told her how pretty she was, considering
that she didn't look the least like a May-bug. After a
while, all the other May-bugs who lived in the tree came to pay
them a call. As they stared at Thumbelina, the lady May-bugs
threw up their feelers and said:

"Why, she has only two legs-what a miserable sight!"

"She hasn't any feelers," one cried.

"She is pinched in at the waist-how shameful! She looks
like a human being-how ugly she is!" said all of the female
May-bugs.

Yet Thumbelina was as pretty as ever. Even the May-bug who
had flown away with her knew that, but as every last one of them
kept calling her ugly, he at length came to agree with them and
would have nothing to do with her-she could go wherever she
chose. They flew down out of the tree with her and left her on a
daisy, where she sat and cried because she was so ugly that the
May-bugs wouldn't have anything to do with her.

Nevertheless, she was the loveliest little girl you can
imagine, and as frail and fine as the petal of a rose.

All summer long, poor Thumbelina lived all alone in the
woods. She wove herself a hammock of grass, and hung it under a
big burdock leaf to keep off the rain. She took honey from the
flowers for food, and drank the dew which she found on the leaves
every morning. In this way the summer and fall went by. Then came
the winter, the long, cold winter. All the birds who had sung so
sweetly for her flew away. The trees and the flowers withered.
The big burdock leaf under which she had lived shriveled up until
nothing was left of it but a dry, yellow stalk. She was terribly
cold, for her clothes had worn threadbare and she herself was so
slender and frail. Poor Thumbelina, she would freeze to death!
Snow began to fall, and every time a snowflake struck her it was
as if she had been hit by a whole shovelful, for we are quite
tall while she measured only an inch. She wrapped a withered leaf
about her, but there was no warmth in it. She shivered with
cold.

Near the edge of the woods where she now had arrived, was a
large grain field, but the grain had been harvested long ago.
Only the dry, bare stubble stuck out of the frozen ground. It was
just as if she were lost in a vast forest, and oh how she
shivered with cold! Then she came to the door of a field mouse,
who had a little hole amidst the stubble. There this mouse lived,
warm and cozy, with a whole store-room of grain, and a
magnificent kitchen and pantry. Poor Thumbelina stood at the
door, just like a beggar child, and pled for a little bit of
barley, because she hadn't had anything to eat for two days
past.

"Why, you poor little thing," said the field mouse, who
turned out to be a kind-hearted old creature. "You must come into
my warm room and share my dinner." She took such a fancy to
Thumbelina that she said, "If you care to, you may stay with me
all winter, but you must keep my room tidy, and tell me stories,
for I am very fond of them." Thumbelina did as the kind old field
mouse asked and she had a very good time of it.

"Soon we shall have a visitor," the field mouse said. "Once
every week my neighbor comes to see me, and he is even better off
than I am. His rooms are large, and he wears such a beautiful
black velvet coat. If you could only get him for a husband you
would be well taken care of, but he can't see anything. You
must tell him the very best stories you know."

Thumbelina did not like this suggestion. She would not even
consider the neighbor, because he was a mole. He paid them a
visit in his black velvet coat. The field mouse talked about how
wealthy and wise he was, and how his home was more than twenty
times larger than hers. But for all of his knowledge he cared
nothing at all for the sun and the flowers. He had nothing good
to say for them, and had never laid eyes on them. As

Thumbelina had to sing for him, she sang, "May-bug, May-bug,
fly away home," and "The Monk goes afield." The mole fell in love
with her sweet voice, but he didn't say anything about it
yet, for he was a most discreet fellow.

He had just dug a long tunnel through the ground from his
house to theirs, and the field mouse and Thumbelina were invited
to use it whenever they pleased, though he warned them not to be
alarmed by the dead bird which lay in this passage. It was a
complete bird, with feather and beak. It must have died quite
recently, when winter set in, and it was buried right in the
middle of the tunnel.

The mole took in his mouth a torch of decayed wood. In the
darkness it glimmered like fire. He went ahead of them to light
the way through the long, dark passage. When they came to where
the dead bird lay, the mole put his broad nose to the ceiling and
made a large hole through which daylight could fall. In the
middle of the floor lay a dead swallow, with his lovely wings
folded at his sides and his head tucked under his feathers. The
poor bird must certainly have died of the cold. Thumbelina felt
so sorry for him. She loved all the little birds who had sung and
sweetly twittered to her all through the summer. But the mole
gave the body a kick with his short stumps, and said, "Now he
won't be chirping any more. What a wretched thing it is to
be born a little bird. Thank goodness none of my children can be
a bird, who has nothing but his 'chirp, chirp', and must starve
to death when winter comes along."

"Yes, you are so right, you sensible man," the field mouse
agreed. "What good is all his chirp-chirping to a bird in the
winter time, when he starves and freezes? But that's
considered very grand, I imagine."

Thumbelina kept silent, but when the others turned their
back on the bird she bent over, smoothed aside the feathers that
hid the bird's head, and kissed his closed eyes.

"Maybe it was he who sang so sweetly to me in the
summertime," she thought to herself. "What pleasure he gave me,
the dear, pretty bird."

The mole closed up the hole that let in the daylight, and
then he took the ladies home. That night Thumbelina could not
sleep a wink, so she got up and wove a fine large coverlet out of
hay. She took it to the dead bird and spread it over him, so that
he would lie warm in the cold earth. She tucked him in with some
soft thistledown that she had found in the field mouse's
room.

"Good-by, you pretty little bird," she said. "Good-by, and
thank you for your sweet songs last summer, when the trees were
all green and the sun shone so warmly upon us." She laid her head
on his breast, and it startled her to feel a soft thump, as if
something were beating inside. This was the bird's heart.
He was not dead- he was only numb with cold, and now that he had
been warmed he came to life again.

In the fall, all swallows fly off to warm countries, but if
one of them starts too late he gets so cold that he drops down as
if he were dead, and lies where he fell. And then the cold snow
covers him.

Thumbelina was so frightened that she trembled, for the bird
was so big, so enormous compared to her own inch of height. But
she mustered her courage, tucked the cotton wool down closer
around the poor bird, brought the mint leaf that covered her own
bed, and spread it over the bird's head.

The following night she tiptoed out to him again. He was
alive now, but so weak that he could barely open his eyes for a
moment to look at Thumbelina, who stood beside him with the piece
of touchwood that was her only lantern.

"Thank you, pretty little child," the sick swallow said. "I
have been wonderfully warmed. Soon I shall get strong once more,
and be able to fly again in the warm sunshine."

Then she brought him some water in the petal of a flower.
The swallow drank, and told her how he had hurt one of his wings
in a thorn bush, and for that reason couldn't fly as fast
as the other swallows when they flew far, far away to the warm
countries. Finally he had dropped to the ground. That was all he
remembered, and he had no idea how he came to be where she found
him.

The swallow stayed there all through the winter, and
Thumbelina was kind to him and tended him with loving care. She
didn't say anything about this to the field mouse or to the
mole, because they did not like the poor unfortunate swallow.

As soon as spring came and the sun warmed the earth, the
swallow told Thumbelina it was time to say good-by. She reopened
the hole that the mole had made in the ceiling, and the sun shone
in splendor upon them. The swallow asked Thumbelina to go with
him. She could sit on his back as they flew away through the
green woods. But Thumbelina knew that it would make the old field
mouse feel badly if she left like that, so she said:

"No, I cannot go."

"Fare you well, fare you well, my good and pretty girl,"
said the swallow, as he flew into the sunshine. Tears came into
Thumbelina's eyes as she watched him go, for she was so
fond of the poor swallow.

"Chirp, chirp!" sang the bird, at he flew into the green
woods.

Thumbelina felt very downcast. She was not permitted to go
out in the warm sunshine. Moreover, the grain that was sown in
the field above the field mouse's house grew so tall that,
to a poor little girl who was only an inch high, it was like a
dense forest.

"You must work on your trousseau this summer," the field
mouse said, for their neighbor, that loathsome mole in his black
velvet coat, had proposed to her. "You must have both woolens and
linens, both bedding and wardrobe, when you become the
mole's wife."

Thumbelina had to turn the spindle, and the field mouse
hired four spiders to spin and weave for her day and night. The
mole came to call every evening, and his favorite remark was that
the sun, which now baked the earth as hard as a rock, would not
be nearly so hot when summer was over. Yes, as soon as summer was
past he would be marrying Thumbelina. But she was not at all
happy about it, because she didn't like the tedious mole
the least bit. Every morning at sunrise and every evening at
sunset, she would steal out the door. When the breeze blew the
ears of grain apart she could catch glimpses of the blue sky. She
could dream about how bright and fair it was out of doors, and
how she wished she would see her dear swallow again. But he did
not come back, for doubtless he was far away, flying about in the
lovely green woods.

When fall arrived, Thumbelina's whole trousseau was
ready.

"Your wedding day is four weeks off," the field mouse told
her. But Thumbelina cried and declared that she would not have
the tedious mole for a husband.

"Fiddlesticks," said the field mouse. "Don't you be
obstinate, or I'll bite you with my white teeth. Why,
you're getting a superb husband. The queen herself
hasn't a black velvet coat as fine as his. Both his kitchen
and his cellar are well supplied. You ought to thank goodness
that you are getting him."

Then came the wedding day. The mole had come to take
Thumbelina home with him, where she would have to live deep
underground and never go out in the warm sunshine again, because
he disliked it so. The poor little girl felt very sad that she
had to say good-by to the glorious sun, which the field mouse had
at least let her look out at through the doorway.

"Farewell, bright sun!" she said. With her arm stretched
toward it she walked a little way from the field mouse's
home. The grain had been harvested, and only the dry stubble was
left in the field. "Farewell. farewell!" she cried again, and
flung her little arms around a small red flower that was still in
bloom. "If you see my dear swallow, please give him my love."

"Chirp, chirp! Chirp, chirp!" She suddenly heard a
twittering over her head. She looked up and there was the
swallow, just passing by. He was so glad to see Thumbelina
although, when she told him how she hated to marry the mole and
live deep underground where the sun never shone, she could not
hold back her tears.

"Now that the cold winter is coming," the swallow told
her, "I shall fly far, far away to the warm countries.
Won't you come along with me? You can ride on my back. Just
tie yourself on with your sash, and away we'll fly, far
from the ugly mole and his dark hole-far, far away, over the
mountains to the warm countries where the sun shines so much
fairer than here, to where it is always summer and there are
always flowers. Please fly away with me, dear little Thumbelina,
you who saved my life when I lay frozen in a dark hole in the
earth."

"Yes, I will go with you!" said Thumbelina. She sat on his
back, put her feet on his outstretched wings, and fastened her
sash to one of his strongest feathers. Then the swallow soared
into the air over forests and over lakes, high up over the great
mountains that are always capped with snow. When Thumbelina felt
cold in the chill air, she crept under the bird's warm
feathers, with only her little head stuck out to watch all the
wonderful sights below.

At length they came to the warm countries. There the sun
shone far more brightly than it ever does here, and the sky
seemed twice as high. Along the ditches and hedgerows grew
marvelous green and blue grapes. Lemons and oranges hung in the
woods. The air smelled sweetly of myrtle and thyme. By the
wayside, the loveliest children ran hither and thither, playing
with the brightly colored butterflies.

But the swallow flew on still farther, and it became more
and more beautiful. Under magnificent green trees, on the shore
of a blue lake there stood an ancient palace of dazzling white
marble. The lofty pillars were wreathed with vines, and at the
top of them many swallows had made their nests. One nest belonged
to the swallow who carried Thumbelina.

"This is my home," the swallow told her. "If you will choose
one of those glorious flowers in bloom down below, I shall place
you in it, and you will have all that your heart desires."

"That will be lovely," she cried, and clapped her tiny
hands.

A great white marble pillar had fallen to the ground, where
it lay in three broken pieces. Between these pieces grew the
loveliest large white flowers. The swallow flew down with
Thumbelina and put her on one of the large petals. How surprised
she was to find in the center of the flower a little man, as
shining and transparent as if he had been made of glass. On his
head was the daintiest of little gold crowns, on his shoulders
were the brightest shining wings, and he was not a bit bigger
than Thumbelina. He was the spirit of the flower. In every flower
there lived a small man or woman just like him, but he was the
king over all of them.

"Oh, isn't he handsome?" Thumbelina said softly to the
swallow. The king was somewhat afraid of the swallow, which
seemed a very giant of a bird to anyone as small as he. But when
he saw Thumbelina he rejoiced, for she was the prettiest little
girl he had ever laid eyes on. So he took off his golden crown
and put it on her head. He asked if he might know her name, and
he asked her to be his wife, which would make her queen over all
the flowers. Here indeed was a different sort of husband from the
toad's son and the mole with his black velvet coat. So she
said "Yes" to this charming king. From all the flowers trooped
little ladies and gentlemen delightful to behold. Every one of
them brought Thumbelina a present, but the best gift of all was a pair of wings that had belonged to a large
silver fly. When these were made fast to her back, she too could
flit from flower to flower. Everyone rejoiced, as the swallow
perched above them in his nest and sang his very best songs for
them. He was sad though, deep down in his heart, for he liked
Thumbelina so much that he wanted never to part with her.

"You shall no longer be called Thumbelina," the flower
spirit told her. " That name is too ugly for anyone as pretty as
you are. We shall call you Maia."

"Good-by, good-by," said the swallow. He flew away again
from the warm countries, back to far-away Denmark, where he had a
little nest over the window of the man who can tell you fairy
tales. To him the bird sang, "Chirp, chirp! Chirp, chirp!" and
that's how we heard the whole story.